At last, after all the unpacking and washing that always has to be done at the end of a trip, and several urgent banking and other life-managing things to be done that couldn’t wait, it was a bit tantalising to unpack things like the large quantity of scraps and snippets I was gifted by a fellow textile artist :
Some of the gifted wonderful scraps of hand dyed and screen printed fabrics.
I love hand stitched raw edge applique…
Method testing of scrap strips – machine piecing, bonding web and hand stitch.
In 2019, I used this technique of over sewing of raw edges strips for a small work “Bush Colours” https://www.alisonschwabe.com/weblog/?p=5818 . It’s always bothered me a little that those strips didn’t stay entirely flat but sort of rose up in the middle, and I’ve since realised that although I love the raw edges and don’t want to ditch them, by using a little Misty Fuse or similar bonding web along just the middle on the back of the strip, the fabric will stay flat when it’s been stitched over. I use a hoop of frame to avoid the fabric being pulled sight, as I have a tendency to pull the stitching a little tight.
L- fabric backed with fusible web before cutting and ironing into place R – fabric without fusible backing produced very pronounced frayed edge
No, not behind bars 🙂 but travelling in the US for the last month on a long awaited reunion with our offsprings there in New Jersey, Maryland and Missouri. In that time had very little access to a computer, and found that using just my phone, my Instagram account @schwabealison was perfect for frequent posts recording what I was seeing and enjoying between and as part of wonderful family visit moments.
In Forked River and wherever we went in that coastal part of NJ, the Fall colours were glorious, and many of the restaurants we visited for seafood were close to or overlooking the water. We enjoyed a couple of good traditional diners, too.
Two scientists field tripping…
Everywhere we went, the Halloween decorations were impressive –
I also did a little solo jaunt down to Atlanta GA to spend a couple of nights with Stitch Club friend, beader and stitcher, Barbara Rucket. She and her husband Alan were very hospitable, and on the full day I was there Barbara took me me to a design museum, and to a wonderful fabric shop, like an Aladdin’s cave. We also each managed to buy a pair of shoes from the shop right next door to where we had lunch! Barbara has a lovely studio workroom and we had a lovely show and tell session, naturally. There are signs of her creativity all around the home, and I photographed several things that really took my attention:
Beaded dragonfly ornament, by BarbaraRucket, approx 6″
An original needlepoint by Barbara Rucket, approx 16in framed.
Framed needlepoint stitched by Barbara Rucket, approx. 16″.
These two divine artworks behind glass (hence the reflections) grabbed my attention, and no wonder -they’re composed of primal shapes, plus glitter and wandering threads. The prominent Atlanta artist Lucinda Carlstrom who I looked up online, has a clear connection to traditional patchwork and quilting. I think the patchwork effect of the main cream area is machine pieced fine high silk fibre paper which she began discovering in Japan nearly 40 years ago. Her website is worth a read – we apparently met at Quilt National 2009, and I do remember her beautiful quilt. The basic square shapes, a square within a square, the red and metallic shininess…
Good news last week – one of my pieces, “Abstract Landscape Textures” has been chosen for next year’s Quilt National. That biennial always opens in The Dairy Barn, Athens OH, on the last weekend in May, which is USA’s Memorial Day holiday weekend. I don’t know yet if I will be there myself, but the quilt is almost on its way up there, because in a few weeks’ time Mike and I are going up to visit the families, and I’ll ship it across to OH from Kansas City.
Abstract Landscape Textures, 2021, 95cm h 190cm w, 36″ x 75″ Quilt National 2023
Abstract Landscape Textures, 2021, detail. Hand stitched raw edge qpplique, hand quilted.
The applied fabric shapes are of a slightly metallic gold looking nylon organza, hand stitched with a soft gold polyester metallic thread.
I didn’t write a whole post on this, but mentioned it once or twice as I worked on it – https://www.alisonschwabe.com/weblog/?p=6260 I began work on it in late 2020, but work was suspended for a while late in early 2021 because I just couldn’t settle on what to put in the top 2/3 section; and perhaps I needed a bit of a break, as it was very stitch intensive. I kept putting it aside during that time while I made several smaller works, including “Sunburnt Country”, and my SAQA auction quilt for that year, so by the time I picked this piece up again, I had decided what to do, but it was already more than half way through 2021. But even then, it moved along slowly because I was by then absorbed in the 100 day project, and finally finished it off right at the end of last year, 2021. I don’t recall ever taking so long to sign off on a work!
I always make a 12″ square work to donate to this annual online auction which raises funds to help fund the education and exhibition programs for SAQA, Studio Art Quilt Associates, www.saqa.com
Everyone is welcome to bid in the auction – you do NOT have to be a SAQA member.
This year the auction opens with Diamond Day when any/every quilt is available for $1,000; the first bidder wins. The rest of this reverse-price auction is divided into three sections with a new section open each Monday.
My work, Green Mosaic, is in the first group of 144 quilts, and as several people have declared they really want this one, I in turn really hope it it’s already been sold before Monday, 12th!
Embroidery or stitchery is primarily decorative mark making with thread on fabric, paper or any other surface that can be pierced by a needle, awl or even a drill – bread, canvas, flower petals and leaves, leather, wood, and more including intact human skin. Interesting and unusual images appear in a wonderful collection of examples on Jo Smith’s Pinterest page , but one artist she hasn’t yet included is Clyde Olliver, whose bold, simple stitching on slate, stone and wood is very dramatic.
I’ve been stitching in one form or another since I was a young girl. As a pre-teen, many of my school friends enjoyed embroidering over stamped designs on linen for doilies, table mats and cloths, tea towels and duchessesets. In 1950’s Australia this was called ‘fancy work’, but I haven’t heard that term for decades.
Back and front of a doily I embroidered at around age 11; ruefully stained and much used.
As a teen and uni student, any sewing time I had was used to whip up a new dress to wear out to a party the same night, which was easy in the days of those simple A-line dresses worn by Twiggy, Cilla Black, Jackie Kennedy and everyone else younger than our mothers. In the mid 70s, aged around 30, I found time for hand embroidery again, (see glossary entry titled “Our Tent Period’) Fast forwarding ten years put me and my family living in the USA for a few years. There I became immersed in traditional geometric patchwork and quilting for a time, which led to me designing and making abstract art quilts.
Detail, “Window Onto Bougainville Street” 1993,
Although the techniques, colours and materials I now use in my fibre art have changed over time, I still employ the basic primal shapes – the triangles, squares, circles, dots and lines in various forms and combinations which have always fascinated me. Texture and colour are vitally important, of course, but it is the lines forming shapes that I start with. As I wrote in my previous post , my go-to design framework is a grid, which doesn’t necessarily mean the precise squares of a repeated traditional patchwork blocks quilt, but that experience is certainly an enduring influence on my art.
In my first “Primal Patterns” post, I wrote of an interesting article by Alison George in NewScientist, 2016, about the work of paleoanthropologist Genevieve von Petzinger, who suggested that such basic symbols in rock art and on cave walls were the precursor to human writing: “There must have been an earlier time when people first started playing with simple abstract signs. For years, von Petzinger has wondered if the circles, triangles and squiggles that humans began leaving on cave walls 40,000 years ago represent that special time in our history – the creation of the first human code.” An exciting notion indeed.
These basic shapes often appear singly or in groups beside simple pictorial representations of human, animal, bird and fish life forms painted and carved on to rocks or cave walls. In this modern era we easily recognise them as man-made dating from distant pre-historic times. Today we lack the precise knowledge to interpret them, and can only surmise that they present information or share data with other people of that era, and it’s reasonable to think some could convey information about beliefs held by the people who made them.
That New Scientist article included the following diagram, reproduced here with permission from the magazine’s art team:
Reproduced with permission of Dave Johnston/New Scientist. SOURCE: Genevieve von Petzinger, Andre Leroi-Gourhan, David Lewis-Williams, Natalie Franklin.
These panels present in diagrammatic form the man-made signs and symbols discovered at sites of ancient human activity in every in every major region of the world. Many bear strong similarity with others in widely separated regions, made by groups of people with little if any known contact between them. However, as our knowledge of early Man expands with fresh discoveries, such assumptions may become invalid. Aside from probably being some primitive communication code, undoubtedly these marks eventually developed into patterning appearing on ancient objects, furniture, houses, people’s bodies and their textiles, and as von Petzinger claims, some of them were forerunners to writing.
The most frequently appearing symbols include: spirals, zig-zags, circles, ellipses, wavy lines, signs that look botanical (like a branch or flower stem) dots in groups or lines, crossed straight lines, upturned arcs, things that look like a tussock of grass or bird footprint (I don’t assign any possible meaning to this comment) the hash # or pound sign, and of course the stencilled hand is very common. I refer to such marks as primal, because people everywhere at any time will come up with them as their brains, eyes and hands holding some kind of marking tool coordinate with certain rhythmic arm actions to make a mark on a surface. A toddler with a crayon or pencil in his hand makes scribbly marks, but as he matures he gradually learns to replicate marks he sees around him, and with encouragement and approval from parents, teachers, siblings et al, the child learns to draw things with meaning that others can understand. Mark making is a very powerful means of communication.
If you google something like “mark making by chimpanzees” there’s plenty of material to keep you reading and researching down that rabbit hole for days! I noticed this recent article https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-83043-0 about studies into the evolution of drawing behaviour in humans/hominids and apes, and another https://www.ru.nl/@1168967/can-apes-make-art/ However, as I have an appointment for to take my own art to be photographed today, I’ll save those articles for reading another time.